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1.
Triticum turgidum were examined, using tubulin immunolabeling and electron microscopy. In cells, which at the beginning of the treatment were at a transitional stage between anaphase and telophase, the transformation of the interzonal microtubule (Mt) system into a phagmoplast was delayed. In cells treated at a telophase/ cytokinetic stage, the lateral phragmoplast expansion towards the cell periphery was delayed or inhibited. Besides, in cells entering telophase through an abnormal mitosis, Al inhibited phragmoplast formation and induced the organization of atypical tubulin bundles. The latter formed a network around the reassembling polyploid nucleus. The Al-effects resulted in the disturbance of cytokinesis and the formation of binuclear or polyploid cells, which lacked typical Mts. Instead of them, the post-telophase cells displayed atypical tubulin aggregations. In addition, Al affects cell plate development. Dividing cells, encompassing early interphase daughter nuclei, contained incomplete, atypical cell plates. The latter were quite thick, wavy and perforated, showing large “islands”, which contained electron transparent material. In some cells, the atypical cell plates gave rise to incomplete daughter walls, but in some others they were dismantled. The aberrant cell plates as well as the young daughter cell walls fluoresced intensely after aniline blue staining, an observation suggesting that they contain significant quantities of callose. The above findings combined with those derived from the study of the Al-effects on the mitotic spindle show that Mt cytoskeleton is a target site of Al toxicity in dividing cells. Received 24 October 2000/ Accepted in revised form 19 January 2001  相似文献   

2.
In plant cells, cytokinesis depends on a cytoskeletal structure called a phragmoplast, which directs the formation of a new cell wall between daughter nuclei after mitosis. The orientation of cell division depends on guidance of the phragmoplast during cytokinesis to a cortical site marked throughout prophase by another cytoskeletal structure called a preprophase band. Asymmetrically dividing cells become polarized and form asymmetric preprophase bands prior to mitosis; phragmoplasts are subsequently guided to these asymmetric cortical sites to form daughter cells of different shapes and/or sizes. Here we describe two new recessive mutations, discordia1 (dcd1) and discordia2 (dcd2), which disrupt the spatial regulation of cytokinesis during asymmetric cell divisions. Both mutations disrupt four classes of asymmetric cell divisions during the development of the maize leaf epidermis, without affecting the symmetric divisions through which most epidermal cells arise. The effects of dcd mutations on asymmetric cell division can be mimicked by cytochalasin D treatment, and divisions affected by dcd1 are hypersensitive to the effects of cytochalasin D. Analysis of actin and microtubule organization in these mutants showed no effect of either mutation on cell polarity, or on formation and localization of preprophase bands and spindles. In mutant cells, phragmoplasts in asymmetrically dividing cells are structurally normal and are initiated in the correct location, but often fail to move to the position formerly occupied by the preprophase band. We propose that dcd mutations disrupt an actin-dependent process necessary for the guidance of phragmoplasts during cytokinesis in asymmetrically dividing cells.  相似文献   

3.
Summary.  Cultured suspension cells of Arabidopsis thaliana that stably express a green-fluorescent protein–α-tubulin 6 fusion protein were used to follow the development and disintegration of phragmoplasts. The development and disintegration of phragmoplasts in the living cultured cells could be successively observed by detecting the green-fluorescent protein fluorescence of the microtubules. In the early telophase spindle, where two kinetochore groups and two daughter chromosome groups had completely separated from one another, fluorescence appeared in the interzone between the two chromosome groups. The fluorescent region was gradually condensed at the previous equator and increased in fluorescence intensity, and finally it formed the initial phragmoplast. The initial phragmoplast moved from the cell center towards the cell periphery, and it lost fluorescence at its center and became double rings in shape. The expansion orientation of the phragmoplast was not always the same as that of the future new cell wall before it came in contact with the cell wall. The phragmoplast did not usually come in contact with the cell wall simultaneously with its entire length. A portion of the phragmoplast which was earlier in contact with the cell wall disappeared earlier than other portions of the phragmoplast. The duration of contact between any portions of the phragmoplast and the plasma membrane of the cell wall was 15–30 min. The fluorescence intensity of the cytoplasm did not seem to be elevated by the disintegration of the strongly fluorescent phragmoplast. Received August 8, 2002; accepted September 25, 2002; published online March 11, 2003  相似文献   

4.
Cytokinesis in apical cells of actively growing cultures of Cephaleuros parasiticus Karsten sporangiate thalli was examined with transmission electron microscopy. A massive, interzonal cytokinetic microtubule spindle is anchored at its poles to the medial surfaces of the daughter nuclei at telophase. Later, the daughter nuclei are widely separated and no longer associated with the interzonal spindle; however, the spindle retains its shape and becomes a distinct phragmoplast with an array of vesicles, presumably derived from dictyosomes, aligned in the division plane. Fusion of the vesicles gives rise to a thin cell plate. Some bundles of microtubules in the spindle appear to mark the sites of plasmodesmata formation, but no endoptasmic reticulum is directly involved in plasmodesmata formation. No infurrowing or phycoplast array of microtubules is involved in the cytokinesis. The relationship, if any. between the metaphase-anaphase mitotic microtubule system and the interzonal cytokinetic spindle has not been determined. Cephaleuros parasiticus isone of only four green algae now known to contain a higher plant-like phragmoplast and cytokinetic process. The observations reported can be interpreted as very strong evidence for a phylogenetic affinity between the Trentepohliaceae and the Charophyceae, but consideration of ulvophycean features of the Trentepohliaceae such as motile cell ultrastructure and life histories precludes unequivocal assignment of the family to either the Charophyceae or Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

5.
Rearrangements of microtubular cytoskeleton during telophase in pollen mother cells of some dicotyledon plants with the simultaneous cytokinesis during normal and abnormal meiosis were studied. At telophase I, a potentially functional phragmoplast forms between daughter nuclei, but no cell plate is present. During interkinesis, the phragmoplast plays the role of an interphase cytoskeleton array. Dynamics of microtubule reorganization in polar regions of the telophase spindle is discussed in addition to the role played by microtubule convergence centers in cytoskeleton rearrangements during meiosis.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The distribution of F-actin in the phragmoplast/cell plate complex of formaldehyde-fixedAllium root cells was visualized with rhodaminephalloidin (RP). Increased RP fluorescence appears in late anaphase in a broad zone between separating chromosomes. The fluorescence is mostly amorphous in appearance and does not resemble the distinct actin fibers seen in interphase cells. The actin becomes more concentrated near the midplane by telophase and takes the form of a relatively bright layer of fluorescence adjacent to the forming cell plate. This distribution differs markedly from that of phragmoplast microtubules (MTs) which extend back from the plate toward the daughter nuclei. F-actin continues to accumulate in new parts of the expanding phragmoplast, while RP fluorescence gradually decreases near older portions of the plate. It disappears completely near the new wall in most interphase cells. Treatment of root tips with cytochalasin B or D before fixation markedly reduces RP fluorescence, but phragmoplast MTs remain. Colchicine or oryzalin treatment leads to the disappearance of both phragmoplast actin and MTs. The possible function of actin in the phragmoplast/cell plate complex is discussed.Abbreviations CB cytochalasin B - CD cytochalasin D - CIPC isopropyl N-(3-chlorophenyl-)carbamate - DIC differential interference contrast - MT microtubule - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PM plasmalemma - RP rhodamine-phalloidin  相似文献   

7.
In somatic cell division, cytokinesis is the final step of the cell cycle and physically divides the mother cytoplasm into two daughter cells. In the meiotic cell division, however, pollen mother cells (PMCs) undergo two successive nuclear divisions without an intervening S-phase and consequently generate four haploid daughter nuclei out of one parental cell. In line with this, the physical separation of meiotic nuclei does not follow the conventional cytokinesis pathway, but instead is mediated by alternative processes, including polar-based phragmoplast outgrowth and RMA-mediated cell wall positioning. In this review, we outline the different cytological mechanisms of cell plate formation operating in different types of PMCs and additionally focus on some important features associated with male meiotic cytokinesis, including cytoskeletal dynamics and callose deposition. We also provide an up-to-date overview of the main molecular actors involved in PMC wall formation and additionally highlight some recent advances on the effect of cold stress on meiotic cytokinesis in plants.  相似文献   

8.
The cell plate is the new cell wall, with bordering plasma membrane, that is formed between two daughter cells in plants, and it is formed by fusion of vesicles (approximately 60 nm). To start to determine physical properties of cell plate forming vesicles for their transport through the phragmoplast, and fusion with each other, we microinjected fluorescent synthetic lipid vesicles that were made of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DOPG) into Tradescantia virginiana stamen hair cells. During interphase, the 60-nm wide DOPG vesicles moved inside the cytoplasm comparably to organelles. During cytokinesis, they were transported through the phragmoplast and accumulated in the cell plate region together with the endogenous vesicles, even inside the central cell plate region. Because at this stage microtubules are virtually absent from that region, while actin filaments are present, actin filaments may have a role in the transport of vesicles toward the cell plate. Unlike the endogenous vesicles, the synthetic DOPG vesicles did not fuse with the developing cell plate. Instead, they redistributed into the cytoplasm of the daughter cells upon completion of cytokinesis. Because the redistribution of the vesicles occurs when actin filaments disappear from the phragmoplast, actin filaments may be involved in keeping the vesicles inside the developing cell plate region.  相似文献   

9.
Treatment of tobacco BY-2 cells with 20 microM brefeldin A (BFA), which causes disassembly of the Golgi apparatus (Yasuhara et al. 1995), completely inhibited the formation of the cell plate when the treatment was started before the chromosomes had begun to to condense. In cells in which cell-plate formation was inhibited by BFA, the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast was also inhibited. In such cells, the depolymerization of microtubules in the central region of the phragmoplast did not occur at least for 1 h after the formation of the phragmoplast, while the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast and cell-plate formation were completed in almost all cells not treated with BFA. The inhibition of cell-plate formation seems to inhibit the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast by inhibiting the depolymerization of microtubules in the central region of the phragmoplast, which is required for the supply of free tubulin necessary for the polymerization of microtubules at the outer margins of the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

10.
In this study we analysed the terminal step of cytoskeleton cycle in higher plant meiosis: transition from phragmoplast to radial interphase configuration. Wild type meiosis in a range of mono- and dicotyledonous species was studied. A number of cytoskeleton abnormalities on this stage was described in meiotic mutants, haploids and wide hybrids of various species. We described processes of cytoskeleton rearrangements on this stage: disjunction of phragmoplast MTs, their shortening and the role of daughter cell membranes. The independence of the interphase radial MT system formation from the previous steps of cytoskeleton cycle and from nuclear envelope cycle is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Immunofluorescence methods were developed for examining the distribution of microtubules in freshly isolated and cultured protoplasts and regenerated somatic embryos of white spruce (Picea glauca). Freshly isolated protoplasts consisted of both uniand multinucleate types. Uninucleate protoplasts established parallel cortical microtubules during cell wall formation and cell shaping, divided within 24 h and developed into somatic embryos in culture. Dividing cells were characterized by preprophase bands (PPBs) of microtubules, atypical spindle microtubules focused at the poles and a typical phragmoplast at telophase. Multinucleate protoplasts also established parallel arrays of cortical microtubules during cell wall formation. In addition their nuclei divided synchronously within 4 days, then cell walls formed between the daughter nuclei. Individual multinucleate protoplast-derived colonies subsequently gave rise to elongate suspensor cells thereby forming embryo-like structures by 7 days.  相似文献   

12.
Y.-R. Julie Lee  Hoa M. Giang    Bo Liu 《The Plant cell》2001,13(11):2427-2440
In higher plants, the formation of the cell plate during cytokinesis requires coordinated microtubule (MT) reorganization and vesicle transport in the phragmoplast. MT-based kinesin motors are important players in both processes. To understand the mechanisms underlying plant cytokinesis, we have identified AtPAKRP2 (for Arabidopsis thaliana phragmoplast-associated kinesin-related protein 2). AtPAKRP2 is an ungrouped N-terminal motor kinesin. It first appeared in a punctate pattern among interzonal MTs during late anaphase. When the phragmoplast MT array appeared in a mirror pair, AtPAKRP2 became more concentrated near the division site, and additional signal could be detected elsewhere in the phragmoplast. In contrast, the previously identified AtPAKRP1 protein is associated specifically with bundles of MTs in the phragmoplast at or near their plus ends. Localization of the tobacco homolog(s) of AtPAKRP2 was altered by treatment of brefeldin A in BY-2 cells. We discuss the possibility that AtPAKRP1 plays a role in establishing and/or maintaining the phragmoplast MT array, and AtPAKRP2 may contribute to the transport of Golgi-derived vesicles in the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

13.
A. H. Valster  P. K. Hepler 《Protoplasma》1997,196(3-4):155-166
Summary The distribution of microtubules and actin microfilaments during caffeine-induced inhibition of cell plate formation has been studied in livingTradescantia stamen hair cells. Previous studies have shown that caffeine allows cell plate initiation but prevents its completion, resulting in binucleate cells. In the present study, confocal microscopy of cells microinjected with fluorescent brain tubulin or phalloidin, and cultured in the presence 5 mM caffeine, revealed that the initiation and early lateral expansion phase of the phragmoplast occur normally. However, caffeine completely inhibits the formation of the cytoskeletal torus which occurs in untreated cells during the late stages of cell plate and phragmoplast expansion. Caffeine further causes the disintegration of the incomplete cell plate. The results allow us to distinguish two phases in cell plate and phragmoplast growth: the initiation and early expansion phase, which is not affected by caffeine, and the late lateral expansion phase, which is completely inhibited in the presence of caffeine. Also in this study, the use of a high phalloidin concentration has revealed structural detail about the actin microfilaments involved in cell plate formation: microfilaments are observed that link the expanding edge of the phragmoplast with the cortical division site. In addition, cortical actin patches are observed within the actin depleted zone that might play a role in guidance of phragmoplast and cell plate expansion.  相似文献   

14.
Detailed correlation of in vitro observations with the arrangement of microtubules (MTs) during anaphase-telophase were made on endosperm of Haemanthus katherinae. It is stressed that the general course of events leading to the formation of the phragmoplast is the same in all cells, but considerable variation of details may be found in different objects and even in various cells of the same tissue. The changes of MT arrangement in the interzonal region responsible for formation of the phragmoplast already occur in anaphase. During this stage continuous fibers (composed of numerous MTs) lengthen, become thinner (the number of MTs on a cross-section decreases), and often seem to break. After mid-anaphase, thin fibers begin to oscillate transversely to the axis of the phragmoplast and often are considerably laterally displaced (lateral movements). The longest MTs in the phragmoplast are present during oscillations and lateral movements. The new MTs arise in the phragmoplast regions depleted of MTs as a result of lateral movements (usually geometric central region of the phragmoplast). Clusters of vesicles, which accumulate in relation to MTs which move, fuse and form the cell plate. After the fusion, the number and the length of MTs decrease. Several processes are superimposed and occur simultaneously. Also the cell plate is, as a rule, in different stages of development in various regions of the phragmoplast. The movements of MTs and fusion of the vesicles is complex and the details of these processes are not entirely clear. The data supplied here modify some generally accepted concepts of phragmoplast formation and development. This concerns the center of origin of new MTs, the moment when they arise, and the way they subsequently behave.  相似文献   

15.
The unique cytokinetic apparatus of higher plant cells comprises two cytoskeletal systems: a predictive preprophase band of microtubules (MTs), which defines the future division site, and the phragmoplast, which mediates crosswall formation after mitosis. We review features of plant cell division in an evolutionary context and from the viewpoint that the cell is a domain of cytoplasm (cytoplast) organized around the nucleus by a cytoskeleton consisting of a single "tensegral" unit. The term "tensegrity" is a contraction of "tensional integrity" and the concept proposes that the whole cell is organized by an integrated cytoskeleton of tension elements (e.g., actin fibers) extended over compression-resistant elements (e.g., MTs).During cell division, a primary role of the spindle is seen as generating two cytoplasts from one with separation of chromosomes a later, derived function. The telophase spindle separates the newly forming cytoplasts and the overlap between half spindles (the shared edge of two new domains) dictates the position at which cytokinesis occurs. Wall MTs of higher plant cells, like the MT cytoskeleton in animal and protistan cells, spatially define the interphase cytoplast. Redeployment of actin and MTs into the preprophase band (PPB) is the overt signal that the boundary between two nascent cytoplasts has been delineated. The "actin-depleted zone" that marks the site of the PPB throughout mitosis may be a more persistent manifestation of this delineation of two domains of cortical actin. The growth of the phragmoplast is controlled by these domains, not just by the spindle. These domains play a major role in controlling the path of phragmoplast expansion. Primitive land plants show different morphological changes that reveal that the plane of division, with or without the PPB, has been determined well in advance of mitosis.The green alga Spirogyra suggests how the phragmoplast system might have evolved: cytokinesis starts with cleavage and then actin-related determinants stimulate and positionally control cell-plate formation in a phragmoplast arising from interzonal MTs from the spindle. Actin in the PPB of higher plants may be assembling into a potential furrow, imprinting a cleavage site whose persistent determinants (perhaps actin) align the outgrowing edge of the phragmoplast, as in Spirogyra. Cytochalasin spatially disrupts polarized mitosis and positioning of the phragmoplast. Thus, the tensegral interaction of actin with MTs (at the spindle pole and in the phragmoplast) is critical to morphogenesis, just as they seem to be during division of animal cells. In advanced green plants, intercalary expansion driven by turgor is controlled by MTs, which in conjunction with actin, may act as stress detectors, thereby affecting the plane of division (a response clearly evident after wounding of tissue). The PPB might be one manifestation of this strain detection apparatus.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the process of somatic-type cytokinesis in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) meristem cells with a three-dimensional resolution of approximately 7 nm by electron tomography of high-pressure frozen/freeze-substituted samples. Our data demonstrate that this process can be divided into four phases: phragmoplast initials, solid phragmoplast, transitional phragmoplast, and ring-shaped phragmoplast. Phragmoplast initials arise from clusters of polar microtubules (MTs) during late anaphase. At their equatorial planes, cell plate assembly sites are formed, consisting of a filamentous ribosome-excluding cell plate assembly matrix (CPAM) and Golgi-derived vesicles. The CPAM, which is found only around growing cell plate regions, is suggested to be responsible for regulating cell plate growth. Virtually all phragmoplast MTs terminate inside the CPAM. This association directs vesicles to the CPAM and thereby to the growing cell plate. Cell plate formation within the CPAM appears to be initiated by the tethering of vesicles by exocyst-like complexes. After vesicle fusion, hourglass-shaped vesicle intermediates are stretched to dumbbells by a mechanism that appears to involve the expansion of dynamin-like springs. This stretching process reduces vesicle volume by approximately 50%. At the same time, the lateral expansion of the phragmoplast initials and their CPAMs gives rise to the solid phragmoplast. Later arriving vesicles begin to fuse to the bulbous ends of the dumbbells, giving rise to the tubulo-vesicular membrane network (TVN). During the transitional phragmoplast stage, the CPAM and MTs disassemble and then reform in a peripheral ring phragmoplast configuration. This creates the centrifugally expanding peripheral cell plate growth zone, which leads to cell plate fusion with the cell wall. Simultaneously, the central TVN begins to mature into a tubular network, and ultimately into a planar fenestrated sheet (PFS), through the removal of membrane via clathrin-coated vesicles and by callose synthesis. Small secondary CPAMs with attached MTs arise de novo over remaining large fenestrae to focus local growth to these regions. When all of the fenestrae are closed, the new cell wall is complete. Few endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes are seen associated with the phragmoplast initials and with the TVN cell plate that is formed within the solid phragmoplast. ER progressively accumulates thereafter, reaching a maximum during the late PFS stage, when most cell plate growth is completed.  相似文献   

17.
Plant cytokinesis involves the formation of a cell plate. This is accomplished with the help of the phragmoplast, a plant-specific cytokinetic apparatus that consists of microtubules and microfilaments. During centrifugal growth of the cell plate, the phragmoplast expands to keep its microtubules at the leading edge of the cell plate. Recent studies have revealed potential regulators of phragmoplast microtubule dynamics and the involvement of a mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade in the control of phragmoplast expansion. These studies provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms of plant cytokinesis.  相似文献   

18.
Plant cells divide in two by constructing a new cell wall (cell plate) between daughter nuclei after mitosis. Golgi-derived vesicles are transported to the equator of a cytoskeletal structure called a phragmoplast, where they fuse together to form the cell plate. Orientation of new cell walls involves actindependent guidance of phragmoplasts and associated cell plates to cortical sites established prior to mitosis. Recent work has provided new insights into how actin filaments and other proteins in the phragmoplast and cell plate contribute to cytokinesis. Newly discovered mutations have identified a variety of genes required for cytokinesis or its spatial regulation.  相似文献   

19.
Partitioning of the cytoplasm during cytokinesis or cellularisation requires syntaxin-mediated membrane fusion [1-3]. Whereas in animals, membrane fusion promotes ingression of a cleavage furrow from the plasma membrane [4,5], somatic cells of higher plants form de novo a transient membrane compartment, the cell plate, which is initiated in the centre of the division plane and matures into a new cell wall and its flanking plasma membranes [6,7]. Cell plate formation results from the fusion of Golgi-derived vesicles delivered by a dynamic cytoskeletal array, the phragmoplast. Mutations in two Arabidopsis genes, KNOLLE (KN) and KEULE (KEU), cause abnormal seedlings with multinucleate cells and incomplete cell walls [1,8]. The KN gene encodes a cytokinesis-specific syntaxin which localises to the cell plate [9]. Here, we show that KN protein localisation is unaffected in keu mutant cells, which, like kn, display phragmoplast microtubules and accumulate ADL1 protein in the plane of cell division but vesicles fail to fuse with one another. Genetic interactions between KN and KEU were analysed in double mutant embryos. Whereas the haploid gametophytes gave rise to functional gametes, the embryos behaved like single cells displaying multiple, synchronously cycling nuclei, cell cycle-dependent microtubule arrays and ADL1 accumulation between pairs of daughter nuclei. This complete inhibition of cytokinesis from fertilisation indicates that KN and KEU, have partially redundant functions and interact specifically in vesicle fusion during cytokinesis of somatic cells.  相似文献   

20.
The actin cytoskeleton (microfilaments, MFs) accompanies the tubulin cytoskeleton (microtubules) during the meiotic division of the cell, but knowledge about the scope of their physiological competence and cooperation is insufficient. To cast more light on this issue, we analysed the F-actin distribution during the meiotic division of the Psilotum nudum sporocytes. Unfixed sporangia of P. nudum were stained with rhodamine-phalloidin and 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride, and we monitored the changes in the actin cytoskeleton and nuclear chromatin throughout sporogenesis. We observed that the actin cytoskeleton in meiotically dividing cells is not only part of the kariokinetic spindle and phragmoplast but it also forms a well-developed network in the cytoplasm present in all phases of meiosis. Moreover, in telophase I F-actin filaments formed short-lived phragmoplast, which was adjacent to the plasma membrane, exactly at the site of future cell wall formation. Additionally, the meiocytes were pre-treated with cytochalasin-B at a concentration that causes damage to the MFs. This facilitated observation of the effect of selective MFs damage on the course of meiosis and sporogenesis of P. nudum. Changes were observed that occurred in the cytochalasin-treated cells: the daughter nuclei were located abnormally close to each other, there was no formation of the equatorial plate of organelles and, consequently, meiosis did not occur normally. It seems possible that, if the actin cytoskeleton only is damaged, regular cytokinesis will not occur and, hence, no viable spores will be produced.  相似文献   

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